Turner & Gustafson, Wildflowers of the Pacific Northwest (2006, Timber Press, Portland) have it that E. oregonum ranges to 16 in. tall and E. revolutum to 20 in. Assuming they are still up searching should turn up photos of a cemetery in Victoria that has lawns that are thick with E. oregonum in season.

Turner & Gustafson, Wildflowers of the Pacific Northwest (2006, Timber Press, Portland) have it that E. oregonum ranges to 16 in. tall and E. revolutum to 20 in. Assuming they are still up searching should turn up photos of a cemetery in Victoria that has lawns that are thick with E. oregonum in season.

Erythroniums (E. oregonum and E. revolutum) are my favourite native flowers, both white and pink. Most people around here call them fawn lilies. Trout lily is the name more often used for Erythronium americanum which is not native to BC. Some areas where you can see (mostly the white fawn lilies) by the thousands on Vancouver Island are:
* along Morrison Creek (runs parallel to the Englishman River off of Middlegate Road (photo attached)
* Piper's Lagoon in Nanaimo
* Puntledge River in Courtenay
* Cowichan River (lots of pink fawn lilies - Erythronium revolutum.)
* St. Peter Quamichan Churchyard in Duncan
* St. Mary's Cemetery in Metchosin

I haven't checked in years, but I saw a nice group of (possibly wild) E. oregonum alongside the old Black Mountain (Baden-Powell) trail above Lion's Bay, not far from the trailhead and parking lot that were obliterated by Hwy 99 construction around 2009. It's above the pullout on Hwy 99 just around the curve NW of the ferry exit ramp.